1963 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament

1963 NCAA Men's Division I
Basketball Tournament
Teams 25
Finals site Freedom Hall
Louisville, Kentucky
Champions Loyola (Chicago) (1st title, 1st title game,
1st Final Four)
Runner-up Cincinnati (3rd title game,
5th Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coach George Ireland (1st title)
MOP Art Heyman Duke
Attendance 153,065
Top scorer Mel Counts Oregon State
(123 points)
NCAA Men's Division I Tournaments
«1962 1964»

The 1963 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament involved 25 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball in the United States. It began on March 9, 1963, and ended with the championship game on March 23 in Louisville, Kentucky. A total of 29 games were played, including a third-place game in each region and a national third-place game.

Loyola University Chicago, coached by George Ireland, won the national title with a 60-58 overtime victory in the final game, over the University of Cincinnati, coached by Ed Jucker. Art Heyman, of Duke University, was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. This tournament marked the last time that a city was host to two straight Final Fours.


Locations

Philadelphia
Evanston
Lubbock
Eugene
College Park
East Lansing
Lawrence
Provo
Louisville
First round (green), Regionals (blue), and Final Four (red)
Round Location Venue
First Round Evanston, Illinois McGaw Hall
Eugene, Oregon McArthur Court
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Palestra
Lubbock, Texas Lubbock Municipal Coliseum
Regionals Lawrence, Kansas Allen Fieldhouse
College Park, Maryland Cole Field House
East Lansing, Michigan Jenison Fieldhouse
Provo, Utah Smith Fieldhouse
Final Four Louisville, Kentucky Freedom Hall

Teams

Region Seed Team Coach Finished Final Opponent Score
East
East n/a Connecticut George Wigton First roundWest VirginiaL 77-71
East n/a Duke Vic Bubas Third PlaceOregon StateW 85-63
East n/a NYU Lou Rossini Regional Fourth PlaceWest VirginiaL 83-73
East n/a Pittsburgh Bob Timmons First roundNYUL 93-83
East n/a Princeton Butch van Breda Kolff First roundSaint Joseph'sL 82-81
East n/a Saint Joseph's Jack Ramsay Regional Runner-upDukeL 73-59
East n/a West Virginia George King Regional Third PlaceNYUW 83-73
Mideast
Mideast n/a Bowling Green Harold Anderson Regional Fourth PlaceMississippi StateL 65-60
Mideast n/a Illinois Harry Combes Regional Runner-upLoyola U. ChicagoL 79-64
Mideast n/a Loyola U. Chicago George Ireland ChampionCincinnatiW 60-58
Mideast n/a Mississippi State Babe McCarthy Regional Third PlaceBowling GreenW 65-60
Mideast n/a Notre Dame John Jordan First roundBowling GreenL 77-72
Mideast n/a Tennessee Tech Johnny Oldham First roundLoyola U. ChicagoL 111-42
Midwest
Midwest n/a Cincinnati Ed Jucker Runner UpLoyola U. ChicagoL 60-58
Midwest n/a Colorado Sox Walseth Regional Runner-upCincinnatiL 67-60
Midwest n/a Colorado State Jim Williams First roundOklahoma CityL 70-67
Midwest n/a Oklahoma City Abe Lemons Regional Fourth PlaceTexasL 90-83
Midwest n/a Texas Harold Bradley Regional Third PlaceOklahoma CityW 90-83
Midwest n/a Texas Western Don Haskins First roundTexasL 65-47
West
West n/a Arizona State Ned Wulk Regional Runner-upOregon StateL 83-65
West n/a Oregon State Slats Gill Fourth PlaceDukeL 85-63
West n/a San Francisco Peter Peletta Regional Third PlaceUCLAW 76-75
West n/a Seattle Clair Markey First roundOregon StateL 70-66
West n/a UCLA John Wooden Regional Fourth PlaceSan FranciscoL 76-75
West n/a Utah State LaDell Andersen First roundArizona StateL 79-75

Bracket

* – Denotes overtime period

East region

  Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                           
        
     Duke 81  
       NYU 76  
   NYU 93
     Pittsburgh 83  
       Duke 73
     St. Joseph's 59
     West Virginia 77  
   Connecticut 71  
   West Virginia 88
       St. Joseph's 97  
   St. Joseph's 82
     Princeton 81*  

Mideast region

  Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                           
        
     Illinois 70  
       Bowling Green 67  
   Bowling Green 77
     Notre Dame 72  
       Illinois 64
     Loyola U. Chicago 79
          
        
   Mississippi State 51
       Loyola U. Chicago 61  
   Loyola U. Chicago 111
     Tennessee Tech 42  

Midwest region

  Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                           
        
     Colorado 78  
       Oklahoma City 72  
   Oklahoma City 70
     Colorado State 67  
       Colorado 60
     Cincinnati 67
          
        
   Cincinnati 73
       Texas 68  
   Texas 65
     Texas Western 47  

West region

  Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                           
        
     UCLA 79  
       Arizona State 93  
   Arizona State 79
     Utah State 75*  
       Arizona State 65
     Oregon State 83
          
        
   San Francisco 61
       Oregon State 65  
   Oregon State 70
     Seattle 66  

Final Four

National Semifinals National Championship Game
      
E Duke 75
ME Loyola U. Chicago 94
ME Loyola U. Chicago 60
MW Cincinnati 58
MW Cincinnati 80
W Oregon State 46

National Third Place Game

National Third Place Game [1]
   
E Duke 85
W Oregon St. 63

Regional Third Place Games

East Regional Third Place
   
West Virginia 83
NYU 73

Mideast Regional Third Place
   
Mississippi St. 65
Bowling Green 60

Midwest Regional Third Place
   
Texas 90
Oklahoma City 83

West Regional Third Place
   
San Francisco 76
UCLA 75

Noteworthy

In the Loyola vs. Mississippi State game at East Lansing, Michigan in a Mideast regional semifinal, Mississippi State, an all-white team, played despite protests from the governor and state police of Mississippi. Mississippi State overcame a state prohibition against playing integrated teams. Loyola beat Mississippi State and went on to the Mideast Region Championship game. In the National Championship game, Loyola started four African-Americans and Cincinnati started three, marking the first time that a majority of African-Americans participated in the championship game.

Loyola's first-round regional victory over Tennessee Tech, 111-42, continues to be a record margin of victory for an NCAA men's basketball tournament game.

See also

References

  1. "1954 NCAA Basketball Tournament Bracket". Retrieved October 14, 2011.
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